Apple’s Big AI Push Implied By Startup Acquisitions and Job Postings

Apple has been quietly making a series of artificial intelligence related acquisitions and staff hires in a bid to bring on-device AI to its next-generation iPhones, claims a new report by the Financial Times.

According to the report, indications suggest Apple has been focusing on “tackling the technological problem of running AI through mobile devices.” To that end, it has acquired several AI-related startups, the last one occurring early last year when it purchased California-based WaveOne, which offers AI-powered video compression.

According to a recent research note from Morgan Stanley, almost half of Apple’s AI job posts have included the term “Deep learning,” which relates to the algorithms used to power generative AI.

Previous reports have suggested Apple has been testing its “Ajax” large language model (LLM) since early 2023, but in contrast to LLMs like OpenAI’s ChatGPT, Apple’s primary goal is to develop generative AI that works locally on-device, rather than being powered by cloud services in data centers.

The challenge in achieving that aim involves optimizing the LLM while reducing its size, as well as heavier reliance on high-performance mobile hardware and faster Apple silicon chips. For example, Apple is said to be planning a significant upgrade to the iPhone 16 microphone to improve a new AI-enhanced Siri experience.

Just last month, Apple AI researchers said they have made a key breakthrough in deploying large language models (LLMs) on iPhones and other Apple devices with limited memory by inventing an innovative flash memory utilization technique.

Apple is said to be on schedule to announce a series of generative AI-based tools at its Worldwide Developers Conference (WWDC) in June, when iOS 18 will be previewed. Morgan Stanley analysts expect the mobile software will be geared towards enabling generative AI and could include its voice assistant Siri being powered by an LLM.Tags: Financial Times, Artificial Intelligence, Apple GPT
This article, “Apple’s Big AI Push Implied By Startup Acquisitions and Job Postings” first appeared on MacRumors.com

Discuss this article in our forums

Related posts

Latest posts

Apple’s rumored foldable could be the most expensive iPhone by far

According to Analyst Tim Long, the foldable iPhone could start at $2,300 for its base configuration. That would make it nearly twice the price of the iPhone 16 Pro Max.

With Samsung’s Galaxy S24 FE under $500, buying the A56 has never felt worse

Don't buy the Samsung Galaxy A56 while this phone is on sale.

Buy this Samsung 49-inch OLED monitor deal and get a free 4TB SSD

If you purchase the 49-inch Samsung Odyssey OLED G9 gaming monitor and 4TB Samsung 990 Pro SSD through this bundle from Samsung, you'll pocket $666 in savings.

One of Digital Trends favorite folding phones is (at least) $300 off today

When it is on sale, the Samsung Z Fold 6 becomes the best foldable phone. It's just that simple.

Psst … wanna buy the massive Twitter logo sign?

Fancy owning the iconic Twitter logo sign that once appeared outside the company's HQ until Elon Musk had it unceremoniously removed?

Samsung sets the date for wide release of One UI 7 update

Samsung will start the public rollout of One UI 7 on April 7, covering its latest foldable phones and tablets, followed by older flagships in the coming weeks.

Pebble might have a smartwatch reboot waiting in the wings for tomorrow

Pebble started hyping users up with an email about an upcoming announcement.

Best Buy kicks off HUGE TechFest sale event — here are the top 10 deals that no Android user should miss

Best Buy has just launched TechFest, a sitewide sale event with some of the best deals I've seen since Black

Samsung could give its Now Bar a customization boost with Good Lock

Rumors claimed Samsung is working on a Good Lock module for the Now Bar.

Google could be peering in MediaTek’s direction for next set of AI chips

Google is tipped to be working with Taiwan chip maker MediaTek for its next set of AI chips,